tangent
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 28/1/04
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(Please!!!) Use the search function of this site and Google, they're both Gold!
Some people on here have gone to a lot of trouble to document their hard work and research.
My approach to going all grain was a smooth transition because I wasn't trying to make a truck load of "Lite Ice" with some basic ingredients. All I wanted was malty and hoppy. The cornerstones of all things beery.
But just start with the basics eh? It's all just down to a few steps, like doing the steps of an extract brew but less can opener.
Forget chillers, clearing tablets and whirlpooling. (all in their time but steady as she goes)
Think back to a time before digital meters and BeerMash tm Software.
Look at your gear, how many pots and pans can you muster up and for how long. You want to put a whole day aside for your 1st AG! And you'll probably want a heap of spills and accidents cleaned up by the time your co-habitants appear home from school/work/stealing/AA meeting.
Keep the first few simple:
1. Get a damn thermometer!
2. Buy as many stubbie of Ales you can, IPA's, APA's, wanky Ales, great Ales, drink it, drink many. All the brands you can find.
3. Find a BASIC recipe. 1 base malt and a little crystal at most! Don't make a bloody Hoegaarden or something stupid 1st! Plenty of time for all the colours of the beerbow.
4. Get a brewshop to supply and crush your grain. They should be able to supply you with enough grain and hops to do a brew for around the same price as a fancy can of imported extract.
5. Do a mash in some buckets, an esky, whatever.
6. Boil it in pots, a pot, a copper, lots of microwaves, whatever.
7. Add hops and keep boiling.
8. Cool down however (some pots in a sink of ice water maybe )
9. Ferment the same as the last zillion brews you did with a can.
h34r:
10. Drink a beer.
i can tell you your brew will taste 10 times better than the extract brews you've been making!
All of a sudden the battle changes from "what flavours can I keep out of this", to "wow, what other flavours can i make."
Then start to fine tune :excl:
One taste of grain and you'll go beer crazy like the poor souls here with extra tasty beer on tap rehahahahahahaha!
(seriously, it's NOT that hard!) and the rewards are :beer:
fine tuning your keg system, now THAT's an lesson in patience and extreme voilence
Some people on here have gone to a lot of trouble to document their hard work and research.
My approach to going all grain was a smooth transition because I wasn't trying to make a truck load of "Lite Ice" with some basic ingredients. All I wanted was malty and hoppy. The cornerstones of all things beery.
But just start with the basics eh? It's all just down to a few steps, like doing the steps of an extract brew but less can opener.
Forget chillers, clearing tablets and whirlpooling. (all in their time but steady as she goes)
Think back to a time before digital meters and BeerMash tm Software.
Look at your gear, how many pots and pans can you muster up and for how long. You want to put a whole day aside for your 1st AG! And you'll probably want a heap of spills and accidents cleaned up by the time your co-habitants appear home from school/work/stealing/AA meeting.
Keep the first few simple:
1. Get a damn thermometer!
2. Buy as many stubbie of Ales you can, IPA's, APA's, wanky Ales, great Ales, drink it, drink many. All the brands you can find.
3. Find a BASIC recipe. 1 base malt and a little crystal at most! Don't make a bloody Hoegaarden or something stupid 1st! Plenty of time for all the colours of the beerbow.
4. Get a brewshop to supply and crush your grain. They should be able to supply you with enough grain and hops to do a brew for around the same price as a fancy can of imported extract.
5. Do a mash in some buckets, an esky, whatever.
6. Boil it in pots, a pot, a copper, lots of microwaves, whatever.
7. Add hops and keep boiling.
8. Cool down however (some pots in a sink of ice water maybe )
9. Ferment the same as the last zillion brews you did with a can.
10. Drink a beer.
i can tell you your brew will taste 10 times better than the extract brews you've been making!
All of a sudden the battle changes from "what flavours can I keep out of this", to "wow, what other flavours can i make."
Then start to fine tune :excl:
One taste of grain and you'll go beer crazy like the poor souls here with extra tasty beer on tap rehahahahahahaha!
(seriously, it's NOT that hard!) and the rewards are :beer:
fine tuning your keg system, now THAT's an lesson in patience and extreme voilence